Composed by Essa Malik
Twenty-first century Pakistan may have experienced a socio-political awakening over the past few years — more importance is being given to individual rights, equal opportunities and political correctness. And yet, somewhere in the country’s collective subconscious, an ancient stereotype continues to live on: ‘black is ugly and white is beautiful’ or even, ‘black is bad and white is good’.
The tendency to equate fair skin with beauty is prevalent in many parts of the world but in the Indo-Pak subcontinent, this sentiment can most easily be traced back to pre-Partition colonial times. Back then, the fair-skinned gora British was the ruler and thereby symbolised the beauty, luxury and affluence that everyone was supposed to aspire to. The darker-skinned natives were, meanwhile, the poor serfs and underlings.That stigma about dark skin continues to endure in the present.
One only has to look at the thriving sales of fairness creams across the country to confirm this. The declaration that clear, unblemished dark skin can also be beautiful sounds ‘right’, but tap just beyond this politically correct stance and you encounter a mass mentality that is still smitten by fair skin.
This mindset, of course, needs changing. We live in times where it is becoming increasingly important to celebrate our individuality and to be proud of who we are. Colourism, whereby individuals are differentiated by their skin tones, needs to be negated. But it will take time — perhaps decades even — for the Indo-Pak subcontinent to become proud of its inherent tan skin tones, and to wear them proudly.
A recent controversy around the alleged use of ‘blackface’ by a fashion shoot brings to the limelight questions about colourism in Pakistani culture
In such a scenario, when one of the country’s foremost stylists puts out a shoot, where a model has ‘blackface’, it inevitably leads to protests of racism. This is precisely what happened recently, when model Zara Abid was given a darker shade for a shoot for Ali Javeri Jewellers, styled by Tabesh Khoja of Nabila’s.
Social media had a field day criticising the images. Why was Zara painted a darker shade when a darker-skinned model could have simply been hired for this shoot? Wasn’t this cultural misappropriation where, instead of giving a darker-skinned model a chance, a model with a lighter skin tone was preferred, even if this meant that she would have to take on a new skin tone? How could an established, critically acclaimed brand such as Nabila’s endorse a racist ‘blackface’ fashion shoot?
But first, what is ‘Blackface’?